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AB2506 Offline OP
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Supported by BCHA. Land Tawney quoted.

https://www.outdoorlife.com/conserv...utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email

Feds Announce Plan to Restore Bison Populations and Improve America’s Grasslands
The Department of the Interior will rely on Indigenous Knowledge and direct $25 million in federal funding to build back bison herds and improve grassland habitats

BY DAC COLLINS | PUBLISHED MAR 3, 2023 4:37 PM EST

n celebration of World Wildlife Day, the Department of the Interior announced Friday that it’s launching an ambitious new program to restore American bison and vital grassland ecosystems. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland’s order empowers the DOI’s bureaus and partners to work with Indigenous leaders and communities to bring back wild bison populations in the central U.S. The program will receive more than $25 million in federal funding from the Inflation Reduction Act.

As the DOI points out in Friday’s announcement, bison recovery in the 20th century is already one of America’s greatest conservation success stories. Rebounding from an all-time low of a few hundred animals in 1889, the nation’s wild bison herds now number greater than 15,000. The vast majority of these—around 11,000 of them—are spread across 4.6 million acres of public land in 12 states.

This number, however, represents a tiny fraction of the roughly 60 million bison that roamed across pre-colonial North America. Bison are still “functionally extinct” on the larger grassland systems they coevolved with, according to the DOI, and the loss of this keystone species has been both culturally and ecologically devastating. By working to expand bison herds and steward the habitats they rely on, the DOI aims to improve the overall health of America’s heartland.

“The American bison is inextricably intertwined with Indigenous culture, grassland ecology and American history,” Haaland said in Friday’s press release. “While the overall recovery of bison over the last 130 years is a conservation success story, significant work remains to not only ensure that bison will remain a viable species but also to restore grassland ecosystems, strengthen rural economies dependent on grassland health and provide for the return of bison to Tribally owned and ancestral lands.”

The Important Role of Tribes in Restoring Bison
The order outlines a framework for bison restoration in the U.S. by formally establishing a Bison Working Group. The BWG will include representatives from the five DOI bureaus that already manage lands with bison on them: the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, National Park Service, and the U.S. Geological Survey.

These partners will develop a long-term stewardship plan to establish new bison herds, restore native plant communities, and strengthen existing conservation partnerships. Importantly, the DOI says that “robust engagement with Tribes” is at the core of these efforts. Tribally led organizations will play a leading role in the management of current and future herds, according to the agency, which seems only natural considering their vast well of knowledge and the deep cultural ties they have with American bison.

The Interior Department is committing more than $25 million to these ends. This funding comes from the Inflation Reduction Act, which the current administration describes as “a historic and transformational investment” in tackling the climate crisis while creating good-paying jobs and lowering the cost of living for working Americans.

The Power of Prairies

While the federal government’s ultimate vision is to bring back a portion of the once-thundering herds that roamed the Great Plains, this can only be achieved by improving the health of the grasslands these animals rely on. According to some estimates, more than two-thirds of these habitats have been eliminated over the years. Restoring America’s imperiled grasslands will help the free-range ruminants regain their footing. It will also provide benefits that extend far beyond increasing bison forage.

Stronger, healthier grasslands enhance soil quality and benefit countless other species, from mule deer to migratory birds to pronghorn and pollinators. On a landscape level, America’s prairies are also one of our most important tools in building climate resiliency.

Read Next: The Grasslands Conservation Act Just Hit the Senate. Here’s What it Means for Hunters and Wildlife

Thanks to the deep root systems of native, perennial grasses—which evolved, in part, due to the constant grazing of bison—these ecosystems can store vast amounts of carbon over time. Even though trees get most of the attention when we talk about “carbon sequestration,” studies have found that grasslands in fire-prone regions can actually be more reliable carbon sinks than forests. (This is because deep-rooting grasses store carbon underground, while trees store it in their trunks and leaves—where it all gets released back into the atmosphere during wildfires.)

Bringing back bison while restoring grasslands and bolstering climate resiliency are goals that align with much of the larger conservation community. Several of these groups, including Backcountry Hunters and Anglers, have already voiced their support for the strategic investments that are being prioritized under Secretary Haaland’s Order.

“Today’s announcement by the administration outlines the most pressing conservation issues in our great country,” BHA President and CEO Land Tawney said Friday. “We applaud their commitment and look forward to helping advance the work that will anchor our public lands conservation both immediately and in the longer term.”

The DOI’s plan to restore bison will no doubt be met with criticism, particularly from the cattle industry, which has largely benefited from the disappearance of bison in the U.S. by overtaking the same grasslands that bison once dominated. Cattle grazing is now the single largest use of federally owned lands in the West. According to some group’s estimates, there are currently around 1.5 million cows grazing on public land across 13 Western states.

Accordingly, politicians with ties to the cattle industry have been some of the most outspoken opponents of bison restoration in recent years. In December, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte appealed a BLM decision that granted a 10-year bison grazing permit on state-owned lands managed by the federal agency. Gianforte has argued that bison conservation undermines the health of rural livestock, and that public lands within the state should only be leased to commercial livestock producers.

Last edited by AB2506; 03/06/23.

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Then they will work with greenies to restore wolves to kill them.


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I'm down with bison restoration. I just hope someone understands 25 million is a pitiful drop in the bucket of what this will actually cost, not to mention a lot of people no longer enjoying their mcburgers.

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Wanna bet that not one of these geniuses have given a thought to the fact that most of the prairie land owned by individuals?

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THIS ^. Going to be interesting to see how this is managed. Res in Wyoming wanted wild horses to save them. Now they have 5,000 and want the Gove to come save the rez from the wild horses. They could build a slaughter house and take care of the problem but they won't. .

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Originally Posted by WildWest
THIS ^. Going to be interesting to see how this is managed. Res in Wyoming wanted wild horses to save them. Now they have 5,000 and want the Gove to come save the rez from the wild horses. They could build a slaughter house and take care of the problem but they won't. .

Ship them to the slaughter house in Fort Macleod Alberta. All they process are horses.

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It's a hundred to one that that they haven't thought about private property rights on the prairies and a thousand to one that they just flat out don't care.

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If anybody has a success story of a Federal program in the last 50 years...please share it with us, ANY success. The REA of 1935 turned out well, but that is the last I can think of...


Well this is a fine pickle we're in, should'a listened to Joe McCarthy and George Orwell I guess.
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you all realize the goal to this is the end of cattle ranching right. and the injuns are being used as pawns....for their own good we should have taken the indian wars further


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Originally Posted by AB2506
Originally Posted by WildWest
THIS ^. Going to be interesting to see how this is managed. Res in Wyoming wanted wild horses to save them. Now they have 5,000 and want the Gove to come save the rez from the wild horses. They could build a slaughter house and take care of the problem but they won't. .

Ship them to the slaughter house in Fort Macleod Alberta. All they process are horses.

I agree BUT.

The doo gooders would have a fit. The feds wont allow them to go to slaughter houses.

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Gonna take way more than 25 million once everyone is paid off with their hands in the cookie jar! Who is going to be the new poster child for this little cluster phuque!

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Who’s going to pay for the fences they go through? “Indigenous knowledge” ? What makes them experts on bison management? It’s been a while since they last subsisted on bison herds.


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The buffalo plan has been in motion for quite awhile now.



Are they livestock or wildlife?


Can we hunt them?


Do they need to be fenced in and kept off private property?


Will 'wild' unfed herds migrate when the snow gets deeps?


Will they compete with deer, elk and antelope for food?


I mean they're wildlife, right?


Does Ted Turner feed his buffalo?



LOL

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Originally Posted by SamOlson
Will they compete with antelope for food?

LOL

Bison and pronghorn antelope have a symbiotic relationship.

The large bison rubs out bare spots on the bunch grass prairie which opens up a viable seed bed for forbs that the pronghorn feed upon. The pronghorn eating the forbs allows more light for the grass to grow which the bison feeds upon.

On today's prairie, cattle have replaced bison. Pronghorn and cattle have a similar symbiotic relationship. That is why I always glass the edges of a cattle herd and I am often rewarded with spotting pronghorn.

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Brucellosis here we come

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Originally Posted by gitem_12
you all realize the goal to this is the end of cattle ranching right. and the injuns are being used as pawns....for their own good we should have taken the indian wars further

You do know an Indian is in charge of this plan?

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Whoops!

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Originally Posted by AB2506
Originally Posted by SamOlson
Will they compete with antelope for food?

LOL

Bison and pronghorn antelope have a symbiotic relationship.

The large bison rubs out bare spots on the bunch grass prairie which opens up a viable seed bed for forbs that the pronghorn feed upon. The pronghorn eating the forbs allows more light for the grass to grow which the bison feeds upon.

On today's prairie, cattle have replaced bison. Pronghorn and cattle have a similar symbiotic relationship. That is why I always glass the edges of a cattle herd and I am often rewarded with spotting pronghorn.

Tks, buffalo rock of course 😎 but reading the OP I was wondering what intelligently managed buffalo could do that intelligently managed cattle could not, other than being a whole lot harder to handle and most likely less productive.

Also, I get the tradition/cultural/religious connection, but how did Indians back then manage buffalo other than by burning off the prairie?

Buffalo bones are absent in Pre-Colombian Indian middens east of the Mississippi, and in historic times only spread east after the devastating epidemics of the 15 and 1600’s eliminated the great majority of the Indians.

I’m pretty sure that after they got the horse the Indians themselves were taking buffalo at unsustainable rates.


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Originally Posted by lostleader
Brucellosis here we come

This is the real 800 pound gorilla in the room.


You didn't use logic or reason to get into this opinion, I cannot use logic or reason to get you out of it.

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Originally Posted by Birdwatcher
Originally Posted by AB2506
Originally Posted by SamOlson
Will they compete with antelope for food?

LOL

Bison and pronghorn antelope have a symbiotic relationship.

The large bison rubs out bare spots on the bunch grass prairie which opens up a viable seed bed for forbs that the pronghorn feed upon. The pronghorn eating the forbs allows more light for the grass to grow which the bison feeds upon.

On today's prairie, cattle have replaced bison. Pronghorn and cattle have a similar symbiotic relationship. That is why I always glass the edges of a cattle herd and I am often rewarded with spotting pronghorn.

Tks, buffalo rock of course 😎 but reading the OP I was wondering what intelligently managed buffalo could do that intelligently managed cattle could not, other than being a whole lot harder to handle and most likely less productive.

Also, I get the tradition/cultural/religious connection, but how did Indians back then manage buffalo other than by burning off the prairie?

Buffalo bones are absent in Pre-Colombian Indian middens east of the Mississippi, and in historic times only spread east after the devastating epidemics of the 15 and 1600’s eliminated the great majority of the Indians.

I’m pretty sure that after they got the horse the Indians themselves were taking buffalo at unsustainable rates.

It''s a stupid idea. the Blood tribe in southern Alberta dream of having free ranging bison restored to the prairies so they (Bloods) can be whole again. Given all the cattle, fences and croplands in the area, I'm pretty sure thay haven't thought this out.

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